Michael P. Scharf, Case Western Reserve Law School, co-founder of the Public International Law & Policy Group, Director of Case Western's Frederick K. Cox International Law Center and the War Crimes Research Office

Topic - Sixty Years after Nuremberg: The Living Legacy of Robert H. Jackson

10:00 - 10:15 AM (15 min) Break and transition

10:15 AM - noon (1 hr 45 min)

Panel Session 1:

Title - Nuremberg: Issues and Accomplishments

Presenters:

Lawrence Douglas, Chair, Department of Law, Amherst College, The Law and the Trials of the Holocaust

Michael Mandel, York University Osgoode Law School, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Crimes Against Peace as Crimes Against Humanity: Justice Jackson's Case for America at Nuremberg versus the Aggressor Impunity of Modern International Criminal Law

Michael Marrus, Dean of Graduate Studies and the Chancellor Rose and Ray Wolfe Professor of Holocaust Studies, University of Toronto, A Jewish Lobby at Nuremberg

WEDNESDAY, September 28, 2005 - Day Two

Jason Ralph, Lecturer in International Relations, University of Leeds, UK - Between Cosmopolitan and American Democracy: Understanding US Opposition to the International Criminal Court

Steven T. Voigt, Esq., lawyer, Reed Smith LLP, and Executive Director,
Foundations of Law PAC - An exposition on the International Criminal Court -- Its antagonism to constitutional due process and a just alternative

Alberto Costi, Faculty of Law, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand - Sixty Years after Nuremberg: Is the Replacement of Truly International Criminal Tribunals by Hybrid Tribunals a Valid Alternative for the Prosecution of International Crimes?

Aaron Fichtelberg, University of Delaware - Due Process and International Courts: The Rights of the Accused and the Rights of Humanity